Pyrometallurgical Extraction of Alumina and Iron from Red Mud

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 740 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2000
Abstract
The major waste product of the alkaline extraction of alumina from bauxite [Bayer Process] is known as red-mud. Approximately, a ton of red-mud is produced for every two tons of bauxite that is mined. The red-mud produced from Jamaican bauxite is rich in hematite, alumina and titanium oxide. It has been shown that over 90 wt. pct. alumina can be recovered from red-mud by soda-ash sintering and caustic leaching. Hematite can be carbothermically reduced with a degree of metallization of over 94 pct. At this stage, the product could be charged through the tuyeres in an iron blast furnace or smelted to produce pig iron. The mineralogical characteristics of the reduced product are not amenable to magnetic separation for iron recovery. The problems associated with the use of reduced red-mud as an alternative to direct-reduced iron [DRI] has also been discussed. Special attention has been paid to lower the alkali content of the reduced material. If smelted, the concentration of titanium oxide in the slag will be significantly high justifying its recovery by an acid-leach process. This paper describes the successful efforts of iron and alumina recovery.
Citation
APA:
(2000) Pyrometallurgical Extraction of Alumina and Iron from Red MudMLA: Pyrometallurgical Extraction of Alumina and Iron from Red Mud. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2000.